2019 Women's Twenty20 East Asia Cup

http://dbpedia.org/resource/2019_Women's_Twenty20_East_Asia_Cup

The 2019 Women's East Asia Cup was a Women's Twenty20 International (WT20I) cricket tournament, which was held in South Korea in September 2019. All of the matches were played at the Yeonhui Cricket Ground in Incheon, where a round-robin series was followed by a final and a third-place play-off. China defeated Hong Kong in the final by 14 runs to claim the title. rdf:langString
rdf:langString 2019 Women's Twenty20 East Asia Cup
xsd:integer 2019
xsd:integer 61497534
xsd:integer 1118719594
xsd:integer 2022
xsd:integer 2017
rdf:langString Japan Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString Hong Kong Women won the toss and elected to field.
rdf:langString South Korea Women won the toss and elected to field.
rdf:langString South Korea women won the toss and elected to field.
rdf:langString Shahid Gill and Ryu Roni
xsd:integer 2
xsd:date 2019-09-19
xsd:date 2019-09-20
xsd:date 2019-09-21
xsd:date 2019-09-22
xsd:integer 8
xsd:integer 2022
rdf:langString Kiyo Fujikawa made her WT20I debut.
rdf:langString Sun Meng Yao made her WT20I debut. *''Kary Chan took her first hat-trick in WT20Is.
xsd:integer 4
xsd:integer 2017
rdf:langString China Women won by 14 runs
rdf:langString China Women won by 5 wickets
rdf:langString China Women won by 81 runs
rdf:langString Hong Kong Women won by 37 runs
rdf:langString Hong Kong Women won by 5 runs
rdf:langString Japan Women won by 12 runs
rdf:langString Japan Women won by 2 wickets
rdf:langString Japan Women won by 32 runs
xsd:integer 51 67 68 79 83 84 85 90 91 92 97 104 120 129 132
<second> 570.0 840.0
rdf:langString Shizuka Miyaji
rdf:langString Kary Chan
rdf:langString Shahid Gill and Ryu Roni
rdf:langString Kary Chan 21
rdf:langString Ayaka Kanada 29*
rdf:langString Caiyun Zhou 18
rdf:langString Huang Zhou 21
rdf:langString Kang Choi 14
rdf:langString Mariko Hill 43*
rdf:langString Mina Baek 28*
rdf:langString Nao Tokizawa 22
rdf:langString Nao Tokizawa 28
rdf:langString Ruchitha Venkatesh 25
rdf:langString Shizuka Miyaji 47
rdf:langString Sinae Kim 23
rdf:langString Sinae Kim 25
rdf:langString Sun Meng Yao 49*
rdf:langString Yasmin Daswani 20
rdf:langString Zhang Mei 35
rdf:langString Betty Chan 2/14
rdf:langString Fengfeng Song 4/7
rdf:langString Hyejin Park 2/14
rdf:langString Kary Chan 3/7
rdf:langString Kary Chan 5/7
rdf:langString Li Haoye 1/17
rdf:langString Liu Jie 3/17
rdf:langString Mai Yanagida 2/11
rdf:langString Mai Yanagida 2/14
rdf:langString Miho Kanno 2/14
rdf:langString Mina Baek 2/21
rdf:langString Mina Baek 4/17
rdf:langString Nao Tokizawa 3/6
rdf:langString Ruchitha Venkatesh 2/18
rdf:langString Seungmin Song 1/10
rdf:langString Wu Juan 3/5
xsd:integer 19
xsd:date 2019-09-22
rdf:langString The 2019 Women's East Asia Cup was a Women's Twenty20 International (WT20I) cricket tournament, which was held in South Korea in September 2019. All of the matches were played at the Yeonhui Cricket Ground in Incheon, where a round-robin series was followed by a final and a third-place play-off. The Twenty20 East Asia Cup is an annual competition featuring China, Hong Kong, Japan and South Korea that was first played in 2015 and alternates annually between a men's and women's event. The women's event was won by China in 2015 and by Hong Kong in 2017. The men's events in 2016 and 2018 (both featuring the Hong Kong Dragons – a side representing Hong Kong's Chinese community – instead of their senior national team) had been won by South Korea and Japan, respectively. The 2019 edition was the first to be granted official T20I status after the International Cricket Council (ICC) had granted T20I status to matches between all of its members from 1 July 2018 (women's teams) and 1 January 2019 (men's teams). China defeated Hong Kong in the final by 14 runs to claim the title.
rdf:langString Sun Meng Yao
rdf:langString Fengfeng Song
rdf:langString Nao Tokizawa
rdf:langString Wu Juan
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 13023

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